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Evolution of flagella
Evolution of flagella The evolution of flagella is of great interest to biologists because the three known varieties of flagella (eukaryotic, bacterial, and archaebacterial) each represent an ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution_of_flagella - 14k - Cached - Similar pages

Talk:Evolution of flagella
Talk:Evolution of flagella Nic's introduction to the article: Note ... article. The topic of the origin of flagella is indeed something worth having in an ... would expect under the title "Evolution of flagella" a summary and explanation of the current ... title "Intelligent Design and the evolution of flagella" or something, but then it also shouldn ... m interested in Margulis's theory about flagella, what are the 2 or 3 ...
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Talk:Evolution of flagella/references
Talk:Evolution of flagella/references < Talk:Evolution of flagella References for Evolution of flagella Barth, A. L., Stricker, J. A. and ... 189-198 [10] Margulis, Lynn (1980). "Undulipodia, flagella, and cilia." BioSystems, 12: 105-108 [11 ... phylogeny of microtubules, mitotic spindles and eukaryote flagella." Biosystems, 10(1-2): 93-114. [ ...
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Flagellum
Flagellum A flagellum (plural, flagella) is a whip-like organelle that many ... in each of the three domains. Bacterial flagella are helical filaments that rotate like screws. Archaeal flagella are superficially similar, but are different in ... many details and considered non-homologous. Eukaryotic flagella - those of animal, plant, and protist cells ... membrane, and it is thought that bacterial flagella may have evolved from such pores. ...
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User talk:Dbergan/FuelWagon
... on the other side? ah, but the flagella on bacteria do not have a stamp ... arrangement of pulsars, not alien lifeforms. The flagella on bacteria is just another PNRS in ... to the conclusion that "a designer created flagella", science says "no further information known". There ... happening naturally. What is the probability of flagella forming naturally? I don't know. No ... t do that. ID simply declares that flagella is too improbable. It is a ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_talk:Dbergan/FuelWagon - 157k - Cached - Similar pages

Talk:Intelligent design/Archive 11
... at an ALREADY EXISTING thing, such as flagella of bacteria, sees that it is a ... any one of these proteins causes the flagella to fail to function. ID then says ... we cannot explain how we got working flagella, IT MUST HAVE BEEN GOD. THEY DIDNT OBSERVE GOD MAKING FLAGELLA. They looked at flagella, couldn't explain how it formed ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Intelligent_design/Archive_11 - 335k - Cached - Similar pages

Talk:Irreducible complexity/Archive 01
... Aug 2003 (UTC) done. Martin evolution of flagella This example is disputed by other biologists who observe that there are flagella which are simpler in form than the ... protein motor complex that makes up a flagella; a more accurate analogy is that one ... toxins into host cells. The evolution of flagella article, written by someone not sympathetic to ... I moved the example to Evolution of flagella. Martin 22:39, 2 Sep 2003 ( ...
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Motility
... would like to discuss is the eukaryotic flagella and cilia. These, like filopodia, are extensions ... – this is a microtubule. Cilia and flagella have a core (called an axoneme) of ... motion occurs, thus making the cilia or flagella wave back and forth. This can propel ... medium: either one or a few large flagella are used (as in sperm cells) or ... synchrony to produce a waving effect. Eukaryotic flagella however are totally different to prokaryotic ...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motility - 26k - Cached - Similar pages

Talk:Endosymbiotic theory
... not entirely desirably) article on evolution of flagella, but maybe that's something for another ... who came up with what. Fixed the flagella not being thought to result from endosymbiosis ... it wants. I.e. take off the flagella and use it for locomotion, and keep ... to keep the original algae, but the flagella might go to another daughter cell, so ... without any algae inside but with a flagella.-- Scyfer 15:02, 8 February 2006 ( ...
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Selenomonad
... by one (or two - during cell division) flagella emanating from a refractile basal body on ... of a "fascicle" of numerous bacterial-type flagella (each displaying 11-fold subunit symmetry), twisted ... to become strong organs of propulsion. The flagella of the large crescents are quite differently ... small selenomonads have a small number of flagella inserted in a longitudinal row along the ... feature is the refractile body behind the flagella. This is not related morphologically to ...
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